Later she started talking about a trip she was planning across the mountains to Kubelick’s Grave, and Turk gave her one of his business cards. “Makes more sense than driving,” he said. “Really. You’d have to go by way of the Mahdi Pass, but the road isn’t a hundred percent reliable this time of year. There’s a bus, but it’s crowded and it slides into a gully every now and then.”
He asked her what she wanted in a crapped-out little filling-station town like Kubelick’s Grave, and she said she was trying to locate an old colleague of her father’s, a man named Dvali, but she wouldn’t elaborate. And that was probably the end of it, Turk thought, strangers in the night, passing ships, et cetera, but she had called a couple of days later and booked a flight.
He hadn’t been looking for a lover—no more than he ever was. He just liked the way she smiled and the way he felt when he smiled back, and when they were forced to wait out that off-season storm on the shore of a mountain lake it was as if they had been granted a free pass from God.
Which had been revoked, apparently. Karma had come calling.
There was only the night staff at the bar and all the tables were empty, and the waitress who brought Turk a menu looked irritable and eager to go off-shift.
Lise showed up a few minutes later. Turk immediately wanted to tell her about Tomas’s disappearance and what that might mean, the possibility that his connection with Lise had led someone nasty to Tomas. But he hadn’t started to rehearse the words when she launched into the story of her run-in with her ex-husband Brian Gately—which was also pertinent.
Turk had met Brian Gately a couple of times. That was the interesting thing about docklands places like La Rive Gauche: you saw American businessmen sitting next to merchant sailors, Saudi oil executives sharing gossip with Chinese salarymen or unwashed artists from the arrondissements. Brian Gately had seemed like one of those temporary transplants common enough in this part of town, a guy who could travel around the world—two worlds—without really leaving Dubuque, or wherever it was he had been raised. Nice enough, in a bland way, as long as you didn’t challenge any of his preconceptions.
But tonight Lise said Brian had threatened her. She described her meeting with him and finished, “So yes, it was a threat, not from Brian directly, but he was communicating what he’d been told, and it adds up to a threat.”
“So there are DGS people in town who have a particular interest in Fourths. Especially the woman in the photo.”
“And they know where I’ve been and who I’ve talked to. The implications of that are fairly obvious. I mean, I don’t think anyone followed me here. But they might have. Or planted a locator in my car or something. I have no way of knowing.”
All that was possible, Turk thought.
“Lise,” he said gently, “it might be worse.”
“Worse?”
“There’s a friend of mine, a guy I’ve known a long time. His name is Tomas Ginn. He’s a Fourth. That’s not public information, but he’s pretty upfront about it if he trusts a person. I thought you might like to talk to him. But I had to clear that with him first. I visited him this morning; he promised to think about it. But when I called him tonight I couldn’t get hold of him, and when I went to his place he was gone. Abducted. Apparently some people in a white van took him away.”
She looked at him wide-eyed and said, “Oh, Christ.” She shook her head. “He was what, arrested?”
“Not formally arrested, no. Only the Provisional Government has the power to make an arrest, and they don’t do plainclothes warrantless raids—not to my knowledge.”
“So he was kidnapped? That’s a reportable crime.”
“I’m sure it is, but the police are never going to hear about it. Tomas is vulnerable because of what he is. A blood test would prove he’s a Fourth, and that in itself is enough to get him shipped back to the States and put on permanent probation or worse. A neighbor told me about the men in the van, but she’d never say any of that to a government official. Where my friend lives, his neighbors are generally people with a lot of exposure on legal grounds—a lot of what people do for a living in Tomas’s neighborhood is prohibited under the Accords, and most of them are squatting on land they don’t have title to.”
“You think Brian knows something about this?”
“Maybe. Or maybe not. It sounds like Brian’s pretty far down the pecking order.”
“The Genomic Security office at the consulate is kind of a joke compared to what they do back home. They run facial-recognition software at the ports and occasionally serve a warrant on some fugitive dog-cloner or black-market gene-enhancer, but that’s about it. At least until now.” She paused. “What he told me was that it would be smart for me to go home. Back to the States.”
“Maybe he’s right.”
“You think I should leave?”
“If you’re concerned about your safety. And probably you ought to be.”
She sat up straighter. “Obviously I’m concerned about my safety. But I’m concerned about other things, too. I’m here for a reason.”
“Clearly these people don’t fuck around, Lise. They followed you, and it would be wise to assume they’re the people who kidnapped Tomas.”
“And they’re interested in the woman in the photograph, Sulean Moi.”
“So they might imagine you’re involved in some way. That’s the danger. That’s what Brian was trying to tell you.”
“I am involved.”
Turk registered her determination and decided he wouldn’t press her on it, at least not tonight. “Well, maybe you don’t have to leave. Maybe you just need to lay low for a little while.”
“If I hide, I can’t do my work.”
“If you mean talking to people who knew your father and asking questions about Fourths, no, you can’t do that, obviously. But there’s no disgrace in keeping quiet until we figure this out.”
“Is that what you’d do?”
Fuck no, Turk thought. What I would do is pack my case and catch the next bus out of town. Which was what he had always done when he felt threatened. No point in saying that to Lise, though.
Briefly, he wondered if that was why Lise’s father had vanished. Maybe the idea of Fourthness had seemed like a door out of whatever secret sin he couldn’t endure. Or maybe he didn’t take up the offer of artificial longevity at all. Maybe he just walked. People did.
Turk shrugged.
Lise was looking at him with a sad intensity he felt in his throat. “So you’re telling me Brian’s right and I ought to go back to the States.”
“I regret every minute we’re not together. But I hate the idea of you getting hurt.”
She looked at him a while longer. Two more couples had just come through the door—probably tourists, but who could tell? Their privacy was compromised. She reached across the table and touched his hand. “Let’s go for a walk,” she said.
Really, he thought, all we know about each other is a handful of stories and thumbnail sketches: the short version of everything. Before tonight, it was all that had seemed necessary. Their best conversations had been wordless. Suddenly that wasn’t enough.
“Where are you parked?” she asked.
“The lot around the corner.”
“Me too. But I don’t know if I should use my car. It might be tagged with a tracking device or something.”
“More likely they bugged mine. If they were following me this morning I would have led them straight to Tomas.” And Tomas, an old man living hand-to-mouth out in the Flats, would have been an easy target. A quick blood test—no doubt forcibly applied—would have revealed him as a Fourth. And then all bets were off.
“Why would they do that, though? Why take him away?”
“To interrogate him. I can’t think of any other reason.”
“They think he knows something?”
“If they’re serious they would have given him a hemo test as soon as they were through the door.”
“No. Genomic Sec
urity—if we’re assuming that’s who’s responsible—doesn’t work like that. Even here, there are limits. You can’t steal people away and interrogate them for no reason.”
“Well, I guess they thought they had a reason. But, Lise, what you read about Genomic Security in press releases isn’t the whole story. That agency’s bigger than Brian’s little piece of it. When they break up a cloning ring or bust some longevity scam it makes the news, but they do other things that aren’t so public.”
“You know this for a fact?”
“It’s what I’ve heard.”
“From Fourths?”
“Well—from Tomas, for example.”
“Unofficial kidnappings. This is insane.”
To which he had no answer.
“I don’t want to go back to my apartment,” she said. “And I guess it wouldn’t be any safer at your place.”
“And I haven’t dusted,” Turk said, just to see a ghost of a smile pass across her lips. “We could rent a room.”
“That doesn’t guarantee they won’t find us.”
“If they want us, Lise, they can probably have us. It may be possible to change that, but for now we’re better off assuming they know where we are. But I doubt they’ll do anything drastic, at least not right away. It’s not you they’re after, and you’re not the kind of person they can just pick up and work over. So what do you want to do, Lise? What’s your next step?”
“I want to do what I should have done months ago.”
“What’s that?”
“I want to find Avram Dvali.”
They walked along the undulating pavement toward the harbor lights and the faint clang of cargo containers cycling through the quays. The streets were empty and lonesome, and the remnant dust caked on curbs and walls muffled the sound of their footsteps.
Turk said, “You want to go to Kubelick’s Grave.”
“Yes. All the way this time. Will you take me there?”
“Maybe. But there’s someone we ought to talk to first. And, Lise, there are things you ought to do if you’re serious about this. Let someone you trust know where you are and what’s happening. Take out enough cash to keep you for a while and then don’t touch your e-credit. Things like that.”
She gave him that half-smile again. “What did you do, take a course in criminal behavior?”
“It comes naturally.”
“Another thing. I can afford the time and money it takes to go underground for a while. But you have work to do, you have a business to run.”
“That’s not a problem.”
“I’m serious.”
“So am I.”
And that’s the difference between us, Turk thought. She had a purpose: she was committed to finishing this post-mortem on her father’s disappearance. He was just putting on his shoes and walking. Not for the first time, and in all likelihood not for the last.
He wondered if she knew that about him.
CHAPTER TEN
The senior Genomic Security operatives who had lately arrived from the States were named Sigmund and Weil, and Brian Gately’s teeth clenched every time the two men came to the DGS offices at the consulate.
They came in this morning not half an hour after Brian arrived for work. He felt his molars grinding.
Sigmund was tall, sepulchral, flinty. Weil was six inches shorter and stout enough that he probably bought his pants at a specialty store. Weil was capable of smiling. Sigmund was not.
They advanced toward Brian where he stood by the water cooler. “Mr. Gately,” Sigmund said, and Weil said, “Can we talk to you privately?”
“In my office.”
Brian’s office wasn’t large but it had a window overlooking the consulate’s walled garden. The cubicle was equipped with a filing cabinet, a desk of native wood, enough floating memory to accommodate the Library of Congress a few times over, and a plastic ficus. The desk was covered with correspondence between Genomic Security and the Provisional Government, one small tributary of the information stream that circulated between the two domains like an eternal sludgy Nile. Brian sat in his customary chair. Weil plumped down in the guest chair and Sigmund stood with his back to the door like a carrion bird, sinister in his patience.
“You talked to your ex-wife,” Weil said.
“I did. I told her what you asked me to tell her.”
“It doesn’t seem to have done any good. Do I have to tell you she reconnected with Turk Findley?”
“No,” Brian said flatly. “I don’t suppose you do.”
“They’re together right now,” Sigmund said. Sigmund was a man of few words, all of them unwelcome. “In all probability. Her and him.”
“But the point,” Weil said, “is that we can’t currently locate either of them.”
Brian wasn’t sure whether to believe that. Weil and Sigmund represented the Executive Action Committee of the Department of Genomic Security. Much of what the Executive Action Committee did was highly classified, hence the stuff of legend. Back home, they could write themselves constitutional waivers with more or less automatic judicial approval. Here in Equatoria—in the overlapping magisteria of the United Nations Provisional Government, contending national interests, and monied oil powers—their work was at least theoretically more constrained.
Brian wasn’t an idealist. He knew there were levels and echelons of Genomic Security to which he would never be admitted, realms where policy was made and rules were defined. But on the scale at which he worked Brian thought he performed useful if unexciting work. Criminals often fled from the U.S. to Equatoria, criminals whose misdeeds fell under the aegis of Genomic Security—cloning racketeers, peddlers of false or lethal longevity treatments, Fourth cultists of a radical stripe, purveyors of “enhancements” to couples willing to pay for superior children. Brian did not pursue or apprehend those criminals, but what he did do—liaising with the Provisional Government, smoothing ruffled feathers when jurisdictional disputes arose—was essential to their apprehension. It was tricky, the relationship between a quasi-police organization attached to a national consulate and the UN-sponsored local government. You had to be polite. You had to make certain reciprocal gestures. You couldn’t just wade in and offend everybody.
Although apparently these guys could. And that was disappointing, because Brian believed in the rule of law. The inevitably imperfect, confusing, grindingly inefficient, occasionally corrupt, but absolutely essential rule of law. That without which we are no better than the beasts, etc. He had run his office that way: carefully, cleanly.
And now here came Sigmund and Weil, the tall one sour as Angostina bitters and the short one hard but hale, like a velvet-wrapped bowling ball, to remind him that at altitudes more vertiginous than his own the law could be tailored to suit a circumstance.
“You’ve already been a big help,” Weil said.
“Well, I hope so. I want to be.”
“Putting us in touch with the right people at the Provisional Government. And of course this thing with Lise Adams. The fact that you had a personal relationship with this woman—I mean, ‘awkward’ is hardly the word for it.”
“Thank you for noticing,” Brian said, stupidly grateful even though he knew he was being played.
“And I can assure you again that we don’t want to arrest her or even necessarily talk to her directly. Lise is definitely not the target in this case.”
“You’re looking for the woman in the photograph.”
“Which of course is why we don’t want Lise getting underfoot. We hoped you could get that idea across to her . . .”
“I tried.”
“I know, and we appreciate it. But let me tell you how this works, Brian, so you understand what our concerns are. Because when your image search came up on our database, it definitely raised eyebrows. You said Lise explained to you why she’s interested in Sulean Moi—”
“Sulean Moi was seen with Lise’s father before he disappeared, and she wasn’t connected to the university or any
one else in the family’s social circle. Given Lise’s father’s interest in Fourths, it’s an obvious connection to make. Lise suspects the woman was a recruiter or something.”
“The truth is a little more bizarre. You deal with Fourths on a regular basis, legally speaking. No surprises for you there. But the longevity treatment is only one of the medical modifications that were brought to Earth by our Martian cousins.”
Brian nodded.
“We’re after something a little bigger than the usual Fourth cultist here,” Weil said. “Details are scarce, and I’m not a scientist, but it involves a biologically mediated attempt at communicating with the Hypotheticals.”
Like many of his generation Brian tended to wince at mention of the Hypotheticals, or for that matter the Spin. The Spin had ended before he was old enough to attend school, and the Hypotheticals were simply one of the more abstruse facts of daily life, an important but airy abstraction, like electromagnetism or the motions of the tides.
But like everyone else he had been raised and educated by Spin survivors, people who believed they had lived through the most momentous turning point in human history. And maybe they had. The aftershocks of the Spin—wars, religious movements and counter-movements, a generalized human insecurity and a corrosive global cynicism—were still shaping the world. Mars was an inhabited planet and mankind had been admitted into a labyrinth as large as the sky itself. All these changes had no doubt been confounding to those who endured them and would be felt for centuries to come.